Black pepper sauce

The friendliest place on the web for anyone that enjoys cooking.
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.

Mario66

Assistant Cook
Joined
Oct 22, 2015
Messages
7
Location
Italia
Hi everyone, someone tell me a good recipe of black pepper sauce served with Scotch Fillet. Thanks
 
We sometimes add just a tiny bit of Dijon to it as well.
That's pretty much how I do it too. You can substitute red wine for the cognac. I probably use less butter. I eyeball it nowadays. I like to add two or three allspice berries to the pepper. I also eyeball how much pepper to put on the steaks. Most recipes use more black pepper than we like. Adding some Dijon sounds good to me. I'll try that.

This is what I use to crush the pepper corns and allspice berries. I'm really glad I figured that out, because it's so pretty and isn't very useful for grinding spices finely.

IMG_20151025_220307.jpg


IMG_20151025_220331.jpg
 
The black pepper sauce, I find it too hard, but in Australia they all go crazy for this sauce. good idea of the mortar to pound the pepper, but the idea was to spice up differently.
 
The black pepper sauce, I find it too hard, but in Australia they all go crazy for this sauce. good idea of the mortar to pound the pepper, but the idea was to spice up differently.
I find the regular recipe harsh as well. That's why I use less black pepper and add the allspice berries.
 
While I like black pepper, I'm not a huge fan of it being concentrated heavily into any dish. If you're just looking to make the pepper sauce with less harshness, you might try green peppercorns, which sometimes come packed in brine and have a much milder flavor.

03556.jpg
 
There are all kinds of pepper sauces. If black peppercorns are too strong you can sub others. But au poivre does call for black.

Kayelle's green peppercorn sauce sounds good
 
Oh boy, does that green peppercorn cream sauce sound good, Kay. I put that in my 'to make' file. :yum:
 
There are all kinds of pepper sauces. If black peppercorns are too strong you can sub others. But au poivre does call for black.
Just to be clear, the dish that the original poster describes isn't Steak Au Poivre. It's an Australian dish usually called "Scotch Fillet with Peppercorn Sauce" or sometimes simply "Pepper Steak." Like this:

Scotch Fillet With Peppercorn Sauce And Herb Mash Recipe - Taste.com.au

It does have some similarities to au poivre, but typically the pepper isn't cracked and crusted on the meat. I say "typically" but just like every other regional dish, it has variations. Some call for black peppercorns; others don't. Some do crust it on the meat. But it almost always calls for some sort of creamy sauce with peppercorns.

Scotch Fillet, by the way, is the same cut we call Ribeye in the US.
 
Last edited:
Thank you all for the advice. Steve's right, Scotch Fillet with black pepper sauce, for me and inedible but in australia like these strong flavors. Good l 'idea of green pepper. I feel that I have the recipe link. with green pepper, and I also try to use allspice berries. Thanks
 
Thank you for thanking us Mario. We don't often get that. We all learned something, and that's always the point here. I hope you stick around at Discuss Cooking,.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom